Type-writing machine.



PATBNTED AUG. 4, 1903.

R. W. UHLIG.

TYPE WRITING MACHINE.

APPLICATION TILED MAB..29,1900.

16 SHEETS-SHEET 1.

H0 MODEL.

INVENTORI By Atlorneys, WKD

WITNESSES: %W M fim Evans co. PHOTO-LIT PATENTED AUG. 4, 1903.

R. W. UHLIG.

TYPE WRITING MACHINE.

APPLICATION FILED MAR. 29, 1900.

15 SHEETS-SHEET 2.

NO MODEL.

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m: uonms wnzas co, PNOTOLYTMO,WASJIGTOY. n, c.

PATENTED AUG. 4, 1908.

R. W. UHLIG. TYPE WRITING MACHINE.

APPLICATION I'ILED MAR. 29, 1900.

16 SHEETS-SHBET 3.

N0 MODEL.

INVENTOR: W

By A tlomeys,

PATENTED AUG. 4, 1903.

R. W. UHLIG. TYPE WRITING MACHINE.

APPLICATION rum) MAR. 29, 1900. no MODEL. 15 sums-sum: 4.

FIG. 45.

q: INVENTOR;

WITNESSESILI By Azfzomeys,

1n: onus PETERS c0. wovou'mov. wnsumm'ml, nv c No. 735,179. PATENTED AUG. 4, 1903.

R. W. UHLIG. 7 TYPE WRITING MACHINE.

APPLICATION FILED MAR. 29, 1900. NO MODEL. 15 SHEETS-SHEET 6.

MENTOR: WITNESSES: g c'% By Aftomeys,

74% 2% mahmb 4% No. 735,179. PATENTED AUG. 4, 1903.

R. W. UHLIG. TYPE WRITING MACHINE.

APPLICATION FILED MAR. 29, 1900.

N0 MODEL. 15 SHEETSSHEET 7- WITNESSES: WZKLMZ? @w flm By Attorneys,

PATBNTED AUG. 4, 1903.

R. W. UHLIG.

TYPE WRITING MACHINE.

APPLICATION FILED MAR. 29, 1900.

16 SHEETS-$HEET 8.

NO MODEL INVENTOR:

WITNESSES:

By Affw'yzeys, d9

No. 735,179. PATENTED AUG. 4, 1903. R. W. UHLIG.

TYPE WRITING MACHINE.

APPLICATION FILED MAR. 29, 1900.

NO MODEL 15 SHEETS-SHEET 9.

WITNESSES: 7 fim, By Aftomeys,

No. 735,179. PATENTED AUG. 4, 1903 R. W. UHLIG.

TYPE WRITING MACHINE.

APPLICATION FILED MAR. 29, 1900. H0 MODEL. 15 SHEETS-SHEET 10.

INVENTOR: WlT NESSES: Md v By Alformys,

PATENTED AUG. 4, 1903.

R. W. UHLIG.

TYPE WRITING MACHINE.

APPLICATION IILED MAR. 29, 1900.

15 SHEETSSHEET 11- NO MODEL.

FIG. 27.

21 l |l%lLill|lllll llllul I l l I 19 1613 10 7 4 .1

INVENTOR:

WITNESSES:

By Afforneyx, W-

No. 735;179. PATENTBD AUG. 4, 1903. R. W. UHLIG.

TYPE WRITING MACHINE. APPLIOATI-ON FILED MAR. 29, 1900.

no MODEL. 15 snnms-snnm 12.

INVENTOR: WITNESSES: 21% %m m By Azfzorneys,

Qahgroqh g m: uomus vzrzns co, movoumo, WASNJNGTON. D. c.

PATENTED AUG. 4, 1903.

R. W. UHLIG. TYPE WRITING MACHINE.

APPLICATION FILED MAR. 29, 1900.

15 SHEETS-SHEET 13- NO MODEL.

r IHI br l Q h 3 2 INVENTOR:

WITNESSES: 63

, By Aflomeys,

No. 735,179. PATENTED AUG- 4, 1903. R. W. UHLIG.

TYPE WRITING MACHINE.

. APPLICATION FILED MAR. 29, 1900.

N0 MODEL. 15 SHEETS-SHEET 14.

iwz f I I I W ITN ESSES: We 'M By Alzomeys,

$3.4 W mf aw (mm: versus co. PNOYO-LIYM. wAwmr-Tnm o c.

No. 735,179. PATENTED AUG. 4, 1903. R. W. UHLIJG... TYPE WRITING MACHINE.

APPLIOATION FILED. MAR. 29, 1900.

N0 MODEL. 15 SHEETS-SHEET 15.

I g Z; \mnwmu c 21.2

INVENTOR: WITNESSES: I I W %ww /%M By Atzomeys,

- W (5km m UNITED STATES Patented August 4, 1903.

PATENT OFFICE.

RICHARD \V. UHLlG, OF RUTHERFORD, NEW JERSEY, ASSIGNOR TO HENRY C. ADAMS, OF HACKENSAOK, NEW JERSEY.

TYPE-WRITING MACHINE.

'PECIFICA'IION forming part of Letters Patent No. 735,179, dated August 4, 1903. Application filed March 29,1990- Serial No. 0.614- (NO mOdeL) To all whmn it may concern:

Be it known that I, RICHARD W. UHLIG, a citizen of the United States, residing at Rutherford, in the county of Bergen and State of New Jersey, have invented certain new and useful Improvements in Type-Writing Machines, of which the following is a specification.

This invention relates to improvements in type-writing machines, and more particularly to machines of. that class wherein the types are formed on or carried by a type wheel or carrier which is moved or rotated to bring one or another of the types to the printingpoint.

It relates also to type-writing machines having a keyboard of keys mounted on keylevers for operating the printing mechanism.

It relates also to type-writing machines wherein the paper is carried by a paper-carriage which is fed past the printing-point by a spacing mechanism and provides improvements in the carriage and spacing mechanism, line-lock mechanism, line-spacing mechanism, marginal stop, tabulating-stops, and carriage-release applicable to such pape r-carriage.

The main object of my invention is to construct a machine of very few parts which shall be cheap, simple, durable, portable, and practically effective and the assembling of which shall be readily accomplished with litlie or no adjustment.

As applied to a type-wheel machine myinvention in its preferred form provides a series of novel and simple mechanical movements for causing the depression of any key to first rotate the type-wheel in the proper direction, then to stop its rotation at the appropriate point to bring the corresponding type on the wheel to the printing position, and then to move the wheel bodily toward the papercarriage to impress this type against the paper at the printing-point, and upon the release of the key to permit the type-wheel to move away from the paper and to rotate back to its normal position, where it is locked in readiness for the next printing operation. In order that the writing shall be visible, I carry the paper upon a platen-roller or other support and arrange the printing mechanism to impress the characters against the front of such support. Hence in a type-wheel machine I preferably mountthe type-wheel to move bodily toward and from the paper, its retractile movement carrying it back sufliciently far therefrom to leave the character last printed clearly visible. To this end I prefer to mount the type-wheel on a typewheel shaft which is carried in a swinging frame, so that it may revolve therein to select the proper type, and by the swinging movement of the frame the type-wheel may be carried forward bodily against the paper to make the impression. For turning the type-wheel I provide its shaft with a pinion, which is engaged by a rack, which receives movement from any one of the key-levers, preferably through a suitable universal 1ever. I prefer to divide the key-levers into two series, those of one series acting through the rack to turn the type-wheel in one direction and those of the other series in the contrary direction in order that the extreme movement of the type-wheel need not exceed a half -revolution in one direction or the other. Hence I prefer to use two universal levers, one for each series. universal lever through which the key-levers act is differential, so that each key-lever of either series shall displace it to a different extent from every other, and consequently shall transmit through the universal lever a difierent degree of movement to the rack in order to turn the type-wheel to a different extent, according to the arrangement upon it of the respective types or characters. In order to insure the stopping of the wheel with precision at the exact point in its rotation, which shall bring the proper character to the printing position, I provide a stop mechanism of novel and simple'construction. On the type -wheel shaft is mounted a wheel which engages with a slide which moves transversely of the key-levers and which I will call a shuttle. Preferably the wheel is a gear and meshes with a rack on the shuttle. This shuttle moves in a suitable way or shuttle-race and is formed with stop faces or shoulders adapted to abut against stops which are formed on or connected to the keylevers to such eifect that when any key-lever Preferably each is depressed its connected stop is thereby moved into the path of the corresponding stop face or shoulder on the shuttle, so that when the movement of the key-lever has been communicated through the universal lever and rack and pinion to the type-wheel shaft and the latter through the gear and rack has moved the shuttle the latter coincidently with the required movement of the typewheel will abut against the said stop and be thereby arrested in such position as to pre sent the printing type or character on the type-wheel corresponding to the depressed keyin precisely the printing position, so that upon the throwing forward of the type-wheel this type will be impressed upon the paper. The stop mechanism thus provided remains in engagement during the forward or printing movement of the type-wheel, the construction being such that the type-wheel shaft and shuttle remain in mesh during the forward tilting movement of the swinging frame. By preference the key-levers are arranged parallel and are equidistantly spaced as in ordinary type-lever machines, since this arrangement permits of the greatest simplicity and the most extensive duplication of parts. To avoid giving the shuttle a movement beyond the width of the series of key-levers, I provide a Vernier arrangement of stops by dividing the key-levers into groups, each group having its stops in a different plane and forming the shuttle with an equal number of stop faces or shoulders arranged to move in the planes of the respective groups of stops on the key-levers. Thus the extreme movement of the shuttle instead of equaling the width of the entire bank or series of key-levers becomes equal to a fraction thereof, of which the denominator equals the number of such groups. For example, if each series of key-levers is divided into three equal groups each carrying one-third of the stops the extreme movement of the shuttle will be limited to one-third the total width of the system of key-levers. My invention th us produces a very compact machine of very simple, cheap, and durable construction, wherein the highest speed possible in a machine of the type-wheel class is attained and wherein is realized the. great advantage that the keys have an almost precisely equal resistance and move downward to a practically like extent-that is, have an equal stroke or dip.

My invention also provides numerous improvements applicable in part to type-writing machines having a type-wheel, in part to those having separate key-levers, in part to those having a moving paper-carriage, and also certain features and details applicable to type-writing machines generally, all of which will be fully hereinafter set forth.

Although my invention may be applied in various forms or embodiments, yet to enable those skilled in the art to understand and apply it in the best way known to me I have illustrated in the accompanying drawings a type-writing machine embodying all the features of my invention in what I believe to be its preferred form.

In the drawings, Figure l is a side or end elevation of the machine. Fig. 2 is a plan thereof. Fig. 3 is a horizontal section cut on the line 3 3 in Fig. 1. Fig. 4 is an under side plan, partly broken away. The remaining figures are on a larger scale. Fig. 5 is a vertical mid-section showing the parts in the normal position. Fig. 6 is asimilar mid-section showing the parts in the act of printing. Fig. 7 is a vertical transverse section in different planes, showing especially the action of the shift mechanism and certain details of construction. Fig. 8 is a front elevation of the type-whee1 and its shaft and swinging frame and their accessories. Figs. 9, l0, and 11 are plans of the shuttle-stop mechanism segregated from the remainder of the machine, Fig. 9 showing the shuttle in the normal or central position, Fig. 10 showing it displaced toward the left, and Fig. 11 showing it displaced to the extreme extent toward the right. Figs. 12, 13, and 14 are plans of the rackand-pinion mechanism for imparting rotation to the type-wheel shaft segregated from the remainder of the machine, Fig. 12 showing the normal position, (answering to Fig. 9,) Fig. 13 showing a partial movement in one direction, (answering to Fig. 10,) and Fig. 14 showing a complete movement in the opposite direction, (answering to Fig. 11.) Figs. 15 and 16 are a plan and edge view of the cam-plate; and Figs. 17 and 18 a plan and edge view, the latter partly in section, of the segmental rack shown in Figs. 12 to 14.

Fig. 19 is a side elevation viewed from thesame side as Fig. 1, and Fig. 20 is a plan showing the shutLle-rackand its locking and guiding mechanism for locking the typewheel in its normal position. Fig. 21 is a plan of the shuttle and its rack, Fig. 22 being a front elevation thereof and Fig. 23 a transverse section thereof on the line 23 23. Figs. 24, 25, and 26 are elevations of key-levers of the three different stop groups. Fig. 27 is a diagram illustrating the operation of the shuttle and its stopping mechanism. Fig.

28 is a diagrammatic View illustrating the operation of the difierential lever. Fig. 29 is a plan of the differential plate forming part of the difierential lever. Fig. 30 is a view of a blank from which such plate may be formed. Fig. 31 is a fragmentary front elevation showing the disk-shaped ribbon and ribbon-feed. Fig. 32 is a fragmentary horizontal section showing in plan the ribbon and itsfeed. Fig. 33 is a vertical section showing the line-lock ing device. Fig. 34is a vertical section showing the reshifting mechanism. Fig. 35 is a vertical longitudinal section of the feed-dog lever, showing the construction of the dogs. Fig. 36 is a diagram of the type-wheel. Fig. 37 is a plan of the metal plate or blank from which the carriage may be bent. Fig. 38 is a fragmentary longitudinal section, looking from the front, cut on the line 38 38 in Fig. 5. Fig. 39 is a right-hand elevation, and Fig. 40 is a left-hand elevation, of the carriage removed. Fig. 41 is an under side view of the carriage. Fig. 42 is a detail of the tabularstop mechanism. Fig. 43 is a detail of the line-locking mechanism. Fig. 44 is a vertical section of the key-button. Fig. 45 is a similar section out on the line 45 45 of Fig. 44, and Fig. 46 is a horizontal section cut on the line 46 46 of Fig. 44. Fig. 47 is a plan of the tabular-stop lock detached. Fig. 48 is a plan, and Fig. 49 is an edge View, of a modified form of rack. Fig. 50isa plan, and Fig. 51 is an edge view, of another modified form of rack. Fig. 52 is a plan, and Fig. 53 is an edge View, of a third modification.

I will now proceed to describe thepreferred embodiment of my invention with reference to the accompanying drawings.

The main frame A of the machine is in general of usual form,consisting of a bottom frame or base A and a top plate A ,mounted thereon by means of uprights or standards A Certain novel features of this frame will be hereinafter described.

Let B designate the type-wheel, which in this construction is shown as carrying two rows or circular series of types. It is shown as mounted on a type-wheel shaft a, which is carried in a swinging frame I), shown as pivoted between screws 1) b, Fig. 8. The tilting movement of this frame is sufiicient to carry the type-wheel and shaft from'its normal position (shown in Fig.5) to its printing position. (Shown in Fig. 6.)

Let C designate the paper-carriage, which is mounted to travel in suitable ways across the top plate A It preferably carries, as usual, a platen or paper-roller 0, around which the paper is carried and by which it is supported during the impression.

D D are the key-levers, which carry on their front ends the keys or buttons D D,arranged, preferably, after the usual manner of the standard keyboard, the levers extending thence back within the base A and being shown as pivoted on a fulcrum-rod cl at the back. The levers are preferably arranged parallel and equidistant, as shown in Fig. 4.

Type-selectingmechcmteon-The means for selecting the proper type and bringing it to the correct printing position includes two mechanisms, the first of which turns the typewheel to a greater or less extent, according to the key that is depressed, and the second of which serves to stop the type-wheel at the exact point when the correct character reaches the printing position. The type-wheel when at rest occupies a certain invariable normal position, from which it may turn in either direction through an extreme movement of a half-revolution. Inasmuch as the types are equally spaced upon the type-wheel, so that half of them occupy one semicircumference and half the other, the key-levers are conveniently divided into two series, those of one series serving to turn the type-wheel toward the right and those of the other series serving to turn the type-wheel toward the left. For example, using eighty-four characters arranged in two rows, forty-two in each row, I

may employ forty-two keys and key-levers and may divide these into two equal series, the twenty-one keys to the right constituting the one and the twenty-one keys to the left constituting the other of these series. If any key of the right-hand series is pressed, it will, for example, turn the type-wheel toward the left, and vice versa. The extent to which each key must turn the type-wheel depends upon the position on the wheel of the type corresponding to that key. Hence each key of each series should when pressed impart to the type-wheel an angular movement of different extent. For imparting these variable movements to the type wheel I provide the following-described mechanism: On the type-wheel shaft a is fixed a pinion c, as best shown in Figs. 5, 8, and 12, with which meshes a rack e, which is capable of a double movement. Its preferred construction is that shown in Figs. 12 to 18, where its rack-teeth are arranged in two arc-shaped segments concentric with two centers 6 6, Fig. 17. From these centers project studs 6 6 Fig. 18, which pass through slots e in a stationary guide-plate f, Fig. 15, which also has a cam-slot f, into which projects a guiding-stud f on the rack. Normally the studs 2 are seated at the front ends of the slots 6 as shown in Fig. 12. In this position each slot 6 is an arc of a circle from the opposite center 6. Hence if either stud e is held in. this same position in its slot, so as to afford a temporary fixed center, the entire rack e may be swung around this center, the other stud moving through the opposite groove e while the guiding-stud f moves through its guiding-slot f, which also is formed in arcs from these fixed centers. A partial movement to one side is shown in Fig. 13, and a complete movement to the opposite side is shown in Fig. 14. The movement to one side is occasioned by any of the key-levers of one series, while that to the other side is given by any of the keylevers of the other series. For imparting these respective movements to the rack 6 it is necessary to provide each series of key-levers with a moving part which shall be moved by the depression of any lever, and the movement of which shall be communicated to the rack e to turn it in the proper direction. Any suitable moving part or parts may serve as this intermediary; but for simplicity a single part is preferred, which accordingly is universal, preferably, to the entire series of key-levers. It also must be capable of differential movement, so as to execute varying degrees of movement when acted upon by the several levers of the series. I prefer to provide two such moving parts, one for each series of key-levers, (although this nected at the other end to the lever E.

' vsaiv duplication is not strictly necessary or essential,) and for convenience I prefer to form these moving parts as levers. Hence I provide, preferably, two universal and differential levers, the one acted upon by the righthand series of keys to turn the rack e in one direction and the other acted upon by the left-hand series to turn the rack in the contrary direction. These levers are marked E E, respectively. In the construction shown each of these levers includes a universal and difierential plate g or g, which forms, in effect, the lower arm of an elbow-lever. The plates 9 g lie beneath the key-levers, as shown in Figs. 4 and 5, so that when any keylever is pressed down the plate beneath it is displaced, and the lever E or E is vibrated to a corresponding extent. These levers turn about a fulcrum-rod g and are acted upon by springs g in such direction as to pull their upper arms toward the front and press their plates against the key-levers. These springs g are conveniently constructed as one spring, connected at one end to lever E, extended around a pulley g and passed back, and con- For adjusting their tension the pulley g is mounted on a plate 9 having successive holes, one or another of which may be engaged by a screw g Other adjusting means may, however, be substituted. The arrangement of the plates g g beneath the key-levers is of course incidentalto the particular location of their fulcrums on the rod cl, which is susceptible to change. The two differential levers E E project up to convenient points for engagement with the rack e and are connected thereto by rods or links hand h, respectively, the former connecting to one stud e and the latter to the other. Hence the movement of one lever E will turn the rack in one direction, as shown in Fig. 14, while the movement of the other lever E will turn it in the contrary direction, as shown in Fig. 13.

The means thus described suffice for turning the type-wheel a distance corresponding approximately to the position of the type to be printed; but these means could not practically be relied upon for accurately selecting the type and bringing it to the exact printing position. Hence I provide a stop mechanism to arrest the wheel when the exact position is reached, and I construct the type-wheelturning mechanism thus far described so that it tends to turn the type-wheel slightly beyond the precise position desired. I will now describe this stop mechanism.

Instead of mounting the stop device upon the type-Wheel shaft or otherwise arranging it to swing around a center, which would necessitate arranging stops to intercept it in the circular path of its movement, I provide an improved and practically simplified means wherein the stop device is caused to move in a straight path transversely of the series of key-levers, and the stops are formed on or directly connected to the respective key-levers. On the type-wheel shaft a I mount a toothed wheel a, which for brevity I will call a gear, and with which meshes a rack 2', mounted on or forming an integral part of, if preferred, a slide F, which I will call the shuttle This shuttle is shown separately in Figs. 21, 22, and 23. It is conveniently formed by bending up a single plate of metal in the manner shown and fastening to it the rack i. Preferably guiding-blocks t" or antifriction-rollers are fixed beneath its opposite ends. This shuttle slides freely in a shuttlerace or guideway F, formed preferably in a longitudinal block or casting G, Figs. 9 and 19, which is fastened to the base A transversely over the key-levers. The bottom of the shuttle-race has a groove 1' to receive the blocks t" and guide the shuttle. This casting G has equidistant notches d d cut or sawed into it along its front side, as shown in Fig. 9, which notches serve as guides for upwardlyprojecting stop-arms D on the key-levers D. In the normal position of the key-levers their arms D project up through these slots, and notches d in these arms coincide with the front side of the shuttle-race, so that the shuttle may freely move through these coinciding notches; but above these notches d the respective stop-arms are formed with stopfaces is, so that when any key is pressed down its stop-face will move into the shuttle-race and serve to intercept the shuttle when the latter is moved a distance corresponding to the position of such key-lever. This is shown in Fig. 6, where one key-lever is depressed with its stop intercepting the shuttle.

Referring to Fig. 21, the shuttle has on its front a central projection j, the opposite sides of which constitute stop-faces. I have also shown this shuttle as having at each side two shoulders or stop-faces, (marked j j respectively.) Thepurposeofemployingthreestopshoulders on each side I will explain presently. The key-lever arms D have their stop portions 7t arranged to move into the path of the respective stop-faces on the shuttle. The arrangement is such that when any key is depressed its stop It moves into the path of the corresponding stop face or shoulder on the shuttle at such point as to arrest the shuttle when itis moved a distance such as to bring the type corresponding to the depressed key to the printing position. Hence the stops are so arranged that each will arrest the shuttle at a different point in its movement, and hence present a difierent type on the typewheel at the printing position. Assuming, for example, forty-two types in each row on the type-wheel and forty-two keys, the latter being divided into right-hand and left-hand series of twenty-one each, the shuttle has an extreme movement to each side of its normal central position through twenty-one spaces, and being stopped at any intermediate position it presents the corresponding type on the wheel at the printing position. For example, if moved through ten spaces it presents the tenth type at the printing position,or if moved through thirteen spaces it presents the thirteenth type at the printing position. Hence itis necessary to arrange the twenty-one stops it of each series of key-levers so as to arrest the shuttle at twenty-one different positions, difiering each from the next by one space. The spaces referred to may be of arbitrary dimensions, but must have some definite relation to the spacing of the key-levers.

If the key-levers viewed in plan are straight and parallel and are spaced apart the distance required by the standard keyboard in general use, then it is obvious that the sh uttle might have only one stop-face in each directionfor example, the projectionj and by giving the shuttle a movement which would bring this stop-face into contact with the stop of any key-lever of the series the shuttle would then have an extreme movement from its central position equal to half the width of the entire system of key-levers in the machine-that is, equal to the width of one series of key-levers. Such an extreme movement of the shuttle would have two disadvantages. It would carry the shuttle and rack at the extreme movement thereof so far to either side as to require widening the machine beyond the dimensions otherwise necessitated, or would cause the shuttle to project beyond the frame of the machine, and so considerable a movement would preclude very high speed of manipulation and render the machine undesirably noisy in operation. To avoid these disadvantages, I arrange the shuttle to move only a fractional part of the extreme movement thus suggested. It might, for example, move one-half of such extreme distance or one-third or onefourth. In the drawings I have shown it as moving one third this supposed extreme movement, and for this purpose I provide it on each side with three stop faces or shouldersj, j*, and 7' and I divide each series of key-levers into three groups preferably equal in number and arrange the stops 7c of each group to arrest one of the three faces on the shuttle. This involves the adoption of what is essentially a vernier arrangement of stops, an arrangement which can best be explained with reference to the diagram Fig. 27. In this I have shown one-half of the shuttle and one series of key-levers, the latter being indicated by lines D, which indicate the righthand or stop faces of the levers. In the figure above the shuttle I have shown a scale indicating the successive spaces through which any point on the shuttle-for example, a point opposite the stop-facejwill move, and at any one of which it maystop. These spaces I will refer to as unit-spaces. These spaces in this arrangement are necessarily one-third the spacing apart of the levers D. The levers are divided into three groups, the first group having its stops (marked 70) adapted to enter the path of movement of the first stop-face]. The second group has its stops k adapted to enter the path of the second stop-face 3' and the third group has its stops 76 adapted to enter the path of the third stop-face j Of course normally all the stops k k are out of the paths of the shuttle-faces and only brought into the paths thereof by depressing any key-lever. The diagram shows the first stop-facej in contact with the first stop 70' on the first key-lever of the first group. In this position the second stop-face f is one space removed from the next stop 75*, and the third stop-facej is two spaces removed from the nearest stop 10 while the first stop-face j is of course three spaces removed from the second stop it, and so on throughout the series. Hence to stop the shuttle at the first space, as shown, the first key-lever (marked 1) is depressed to bring its stop It into the path of the stop-face j, or to arrest the shuttle at the second space the first lever of the second group (marked 2) is depressed. To stop it at the third space, the first lever of the third group (marked 3) is depressed, to stop it at the fourth space, the second lever of the first group (marked 4) is depressed, and so on throughout the entire series. Thus the first group contains the le- .vers marked 1 4 7 10, &c., for stopping the shuttle at the first, fourth, seventh, tenth, &c., spaces. The second group in like manner has the keys marked 2 5 8, &c., for stopping the shuttle at the second, fifth, eighth, 660., spaces, and the third group has the levers 3 6 9, 850., for stopping the shuttle at the third, sixth, ninth, 850., spaces. According to this system the successive key-levers D and their stops lo, 850., are separated an extent equal to three unit-spaces.

In the printing operation the depression of any key-lever therefore performs two functions. First, it causes the rotation of the typewheel in the proper direction to an extent approximating and tending to exceed that necessary to bring the appropriate type to the printing position, and, second, it interposes a stop to arrest the shuttle when it has traversed the number of unit-spaces necessary to bring the required type precisely to the print ing position. Any rebound of the type-wheel upon the shuttle striking its stop is prevented by the type-wheel-turning mechanism, which so long as the key is depressed exerts a constant tendency to urge the wheel to continue to revolve forward, and consequently holds the shuttle pressed against its stop and resists any rebound. It then only remains to print the type thus selected. This of course might be done by keeping the type-wheel im- 'movable and moving the paper-carrying platen against it or otherwise by causing a hammer behind the paper to act as a platen to force the paper against the type, these methods being common in existing machines; but instead thereof I prefer to bring the typewheel against the-platen by the means which I will now describe.

Printing mecms.In order that the type- 

